Elemental MIT: Donald R. Sadoway

Professor Donald R. Sadoway teaches 3.091 Introduction to Solid State Chemistry, one of the largest and most popular classes at MIT. In this video, Professor Sadoway closes the 2010 fall term of 3.091 with his characteristic charm and a celebratory champagne toast.

Professor Sadoway is the John F. Elliott Professor of Materials Chemistry in MIT's Department of Materials Science & Engineering. He has won repeated awards for his teaching, including the MacVicar Fellowship. Find out why his methods are adored by watching Sadoway's 3.091 lectures at OpenCourseWare.

MIT's first open house in more than 30 years provided hours of awestruck moments and became a highlight of the MIT150 celebration. Called "Under the Dome: Come Explore MIT," the open house attracted thousands who toured MIT's cutting-edge labs and research centers on April ...

A. Neil Pappalardo '64, an MIT alumnus with a long history of generosity to the Institute, offers his perspective on the values of an MIT education, and shares some life lessons for the students of MIT. Footage includes excerpts from the Infinite ...

On May 6, 2005, Dr. Susan Hockfield was inaugurated as the 16th president of MIT. Hockfield, the first woman and the first life scientist to lead MIT, committed the Institute to sustaining its commitment to intellectual openness, as well as to increasing the numbers of ...

From its founding, MIT has been an engine of both local and global economic growth, playing a key role in the creation of thousands of companies and millions of jobs. More recently, MIT sits at the center of an entrepreneurial boom due to an ...

When Dr. Susan Hockfield was inaugurated as the 16th president of MIT, she used the historic moment to announce another first for MIT: a new initiative on energy and the environment. Established in September, 2006, the MIT Energy Initiative (MITEI) ...

A new prediction tool developed by MIT engineers may give sailors a 2-3 minute warning of an incoming rogue wave, providing them with enough time to shut down essential operations on a ship or offshore platform.

MIT scientists have come up with a theory to predict exactly how much light is transmitted through a material, given its thickness and degree of stretch. Using this theory, they accurately predicted the changing transparency of a rubber-like polymer structure as it was ...

The Independent Activities Period (IAP) is a special four week term at MIT that runs from the first week of January until the end of the month. (Learn more about IAP: http://web.mit.edu/iap/)Video: Melanie Gonick/MITMusic: "Mile Post 1" by Alex ...

For the first time, researchers show two types of turbulence within plasma that cause significant heat loss. Solving this problem could take the world a step closer to fusion power which has the promise of limitless and relatively clean energy. (Learn more: http://mitsha.re/XmrC3)Video ...

By combining sophisticated RNA sequencing technology with a new device that isolates single cells and their progeny, MIT researchers can now trace detailed family histories for several generations of cells descended from one “ancestor.” This technique could shed light on how cancer ...

Engineers at MIT have designed an atomic force microscope that scans images 2,000 times faster than existing commercial models. With this new high-speed instrument, the team produced images of chemical processes taking place at the nano-scale at the rate close to ...

Researchers at MIT have developed a new way to classify neurons by labeling and imaging the proteins found in each cell. This type of imaging offers clues to each neuron's function and should help in mapping the human brain. (Learn more: http://mitsha.re/VruYI) Video produced and ...

Previously, MIT engineers developed a hydrogel made of over 90% water. Now, they've developed a way to incorporate electronics into the hydrogel which could bridge the gap between the human body and electronics. (Learn more: http://mitsha.re/VzEqF) Video: Melanie Gonick/MITHydrogel ...

Engineers at MIT have designed an atomic force microscope that scans images 2,000 times faster than existing commercial models. With this new high-speed instrument, the team produced images of chemical processes taking place at the nano-scale at the rate close to ...

Student leaders from the MIT Black Students' Union and the MIT Black Graduate Student Association recently presented recommendations, to MIT's Academic Council, to make MIT more welcoming and inclusive for all. Watch a few of those leaders discuss issues surrounding diversity and how they ...

Using technology invented at MIT, doctors may one day be able to monitor patients’ vital signs by having them swallow an ingestible electronic device that measures heart rate and breathing rate from within the gastrointestinal tract. (Learn more about the ...

Launched in 2007 through a $20 million gift by The Bernard M. Gordon Foundation - the largest gift made to MIT's School of Engineering for curriculum development - the Gordon-MIT Engineering Leadership Program is creating a national model for preparing the engineering ...

Back in the early stages of construction for MIT.nano, members of the crew stumbled upon something that clearly didn't belong: A time capsule buried in 1957 as part of the dedication to the Compton Laboratories. (Learn more about the time capsule: http://mitsha.re/UNSpl)Video: Melanie ...

Researchers at MIT and Pierre et Marie Curie University in Paris have come up with a new theory that describes how a knot's configuration, or "topology," determines its mechanical forces. (Learn more: http://mitsha.re/RVIRY )Video: Melanie Gonick/MITAdditional footage: Stock imagery ...

Around 252 millions years ago life on Earth collapsed in a unprecedented fashion as more than 96 percent of marine species and 70 percent of land species disappeared. The cause of this severe extinction has been a mystery, until now. (Learn ...

For the first time, researchers have achieved defect healing and marked strengthening through cyclic deformation in nanoscale structures. The novel method is called "cyclic healing." (Learn more: http://mitsha.re/TGuIP)Video produced and edited by Melanie ...

For the first time, researchers at MIT have found a way to control the boiling process. The system could improve the efficiency of electric power generation and other processes. (Learn more: http://mitsha.re/TRIQl) Turning boiling on and off on a surface with separately addressable ...

Friday, October 31, 2014Starr Forum: Palestine Now A conversation with Husam ZomlotSpeaker: Husam ZomlotDr Husam Zomlot is a specialist on Middle East affairs. He is Palestinian and has served as a visiting fellow at Harvard's center for Middle Eastern Studies. He ...

Tuesday, December 9, 2014Dr. Malachy Sumaila on “Thoughts and Discussion on Boko Haram”About the Speaker: Dr. Sumaila is a lecturer from Ahmadu Bello University in Northern Nigeria. He is currently at MIT as a distinguished MIT-Empowering the Teachers ...

Tuesday, March 10, 2015Starr Forum: East Asian Security DilemmaSpeaker: Bonnie Glaser, Eric Heginbotham, Christopher Hughes, Yoshihide Soeya, Richard SamuelsABOUT THE SPEAKERS:Bonnie Glaser is a senior adviser for Asia in the Freeman Chair in China Studies, where she works on issues related to ...

Speaker: Jennifer LeaningDr. Jennifer Leaning is the guest speaker at the inauguration of a new lecture series honoring the late human-rights activist Hrant Dink.About the Speaker:Jennifer Leaning is the Francois-Xavier Bagnoud Professor of the Practice of Health and ...

May 7, 2015Speakers: Ambassador Shivshankar Menon, Taylor Fravel, Vipin NarangAmbassador Shivshankar Menon was India's former national security advisor and foreign secretary. While foreign secretary in 2008, Menon was an active voice in negotiations over the India-US ...

Massachusetts State Senator Linda Dorcena Forry shares her career path with the MIT ABAC community and the work that she is doing in the State during the 2015 ABAC celebration of Caribbean Heritage Month

For her senior project, Molly Kosiarek (XII '15) helped build and automate a telescope system she named the Small AUtonomous Robotic Optical Nightwatcher or SAURON - after the ever-present eye-in-the-sky from Tolkien's Lord of the Rings trilogy. In this interview, filmed at the Wallace ...

In October 2014, Kevin Slavin and Greg Borenstein of the Playful Systems group went to Las Vegas, Nevada to deploy a custom-designed algorithm that would help commentators make more accurate predictions and tell better stories about chess games. The Millionaire Chess ...

People who negotiate their income earn an extra $1 million during their career. Ms. Katie Donovan, a salary negotiation consultant and equal pay advocate, will teach you how to be one of these people. You will learn the expectations, preparation, and ultimately the ...

Be inspired by the 2014 GWAMIT Fall Leadership Conference opening keynote! The speaker is Jenn Gustetic, MIT TTP '07. Ms. Gustetic is the Assistant Director for Open Innovation in the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy. In this role, she is responsible ...

In December 2014, 6th grade STEM enrichment students from Cummings Middle School hosted a SciVis101 session to get a crash course in making science videos. They had two hours to learn demos, write scripts, host, direct, sound engineer, and film! Want to bring your ...

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